Gordon Bell High School - Purple and Gold Yearbook (Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada)

 - Class of 1934

Page 18 of 80

 

Gordon Bell High School - Purple and Gold Yearbook (Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 18 of 80
Page 18 of 80



Gordon Bell High School - Purple and Gold Yearbook (Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 17
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Gordon Bell High School - Purple and Gold Yearbook (Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 19
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Page 18 text:

14 GORDON BELL HIGH SCHOOL The rigour and hard work ended in time. I was called off duty. The weather, the police station and my friends just didn’t seem right. I was out and out disappointed, discontented. I received my pay check and began to curse it. “What a measly sum of shekels for thirty days of slav¬ ery,” I murmured. Here, the bulletin board was my subject for inspection. A note was pinned to it. It read: ‘Report to me, Chief of Police, immediately, as soon as you are off duty. Very important.’ Imagine the fast-flitting thought I had—getting fired, getting a raise, etc. Finally, the Chief’s office hove into view. There on the door was JACK NEWTON Chief of Police Startled as I was, I mustered enough courage to walk in. Then I could scarcely credit my eyes; it was amazing, colossal! There in the chair sat the “speeder,” Jack Newton. Ordering me to sit down, he soon put two and two together for me. He explained how he tested his men on the force once in a while when a promotion was due. This he had done with me. “That lecture you gave me was enough to make any man think. It was excellent! Besides catching me, you riveted my tires perfectly. That’s the way to work and get your man,” he said enthusiastically. “Pat O’Brien, I want to congratulate you on your work—tomorrow you take Downing’s place as sergeant of A division.” I was flabbergasted. I wanted to shout for joy! But my face soon turned pale as he spoke seriously. “Tell me, how is it you didn’t know me as the Chief?” My answer was to the effect that it was a big world and that I had been shifted in from the Other Big City only a week back. “Oh! I see,” he exclaimed, and then quite solemnly: “By the way, Pat, give me the duplicate blue-ticket and I’ll get it cancelled downstairs.” “Oh, now you can’t fool me,” I laughed. “The rules say that I must cancel it myself.” With that we shook hands and laughed. I sure left the office far hap¬ pier than I had entered it. “There you are, Harry. Doing your duty pays, doesn’t it?” “Yes, Pat, I suppose so,” Harry gloomily answered. “But that hap¬ pened to you. It doesn’t do me any good.” The somewhat egotistic Pat O’Brien laughed and said: “Harry, remember saying one has to know an alderman, the mayor, the Chief, or a ‘big-bug’ to get anywhere on the force? Well, tomorrow night you’re going to be a sergeant! Harry, you’re on the good books of the new Chief of Police, and that’s me.”

Page 17 text:

GORDON BELL HIGH SCHOOL 13 stepped across in front of it, and at the same time a gun barked. The brakes let out a terrible scream—the engineer had seen him. Collet’s body was found the next day five miles down stream. The fire¬ man had seen him trip and topple headlong over the river bank and fall into the swift waters. He had not been drowned; his neck had been broken in the fall. The bombs had been found and three men seen hurrying across the field. After a thorough check-up the story of the near bombing came out and many Communists were given long prison sentences. Collet was given a military funeral at which the royal family was represented by the Crown Prince; and his story flooded the newspapers for a week. Experience Talks ' ' By AUBREY WARING “rpHE only thing I can say and think of is that faithfulness and doing -L your job well don’t pay! I’ve been in the force for six years and I’ve never received a raise or promotion and I can honestly say I’ve done my work well and have attended to my duty without a murmur. Jim Bradley was promoted to sergeant of ‘13 division,’ but, of course, he knows an alderman, and is a friend of the Chief; he’s only been there for four years! Now, I a sk you, Pat, how can my faithfulness pay me?” This resentful question, directed to a well-built, jovial policeman, Sergeant Pat O’Brien, was answered in an understanding way. “Harry, old boy, you get that idea out of your head, and quick! Now let me tell you something. Sticking to it pays a reward in the end. I used to be pretty hot and bothered once; I had the same thoughts as you have About five years ago I was on the force and motor-cycle brigade. One day when it was as hot as blazes I was on country highway patrol near the city. It was strange to see the gleaming white pavement disappear into a mirage a few hundred yards away. I had reckoned picnickers from the stifling city would soon be bringing their lunches out there to sort of cool off. About noon I parked my machine under a shade of trees to eat the quick-prepared lunch which I had bought downtown. It sure was great to feel a cool breeze across my forehead. A distant sound of a pur-r-r-, gradu¬ ally becoming louder, warned me of some “bird” speeding. I hardly saw him as he shot by in a big blue roadster; but he saw me. Like magic he slowed down to a snail’s pace, thirty miles an hour. “What a change,” I laughed, “Funny what a blue uniform and cap will do.” The day seemed uneventful, as it dragged on. Then the road began to fill up because of the five o’clock rush of city workers hastening to their country homes. Around the big bend swooped a big, light-green Lincoln, doing eighty miles an hour! “Crazy fool!” I gasped as I manhandled my machine to a roaring, spurting start. It was a long grind—you know the type where you swear and cuss the speeder as he dodges in and out of cars. My lecture was well prepared miles before. At last! The quarry was in hand. I signalled him to pull over, but evidently he was deaf to the police siren. In fact he turned around and laughed in my face. As a last resort my 38 revolver came in handy. I dipped the left tire flat, and this brought the fool to a long, grinding stop. A “blue ticket,” a lecture, a squabble and a search of the car followed, all the while my victim sat perfectly calm, amazingly calm, answering my questions in a low, grumbly voice. He was Jack Newton, and at that time his voice and name seemed strangely familiar.



Page 19 text:

Nocturne A CROSS the restive wavelets danced a lonely midnight breeze, • While bowed, above the moonlit shore, the graceful, tall pine trees, The air was heavy-laden with the forest’s sweet perfume And the slowly dipping paddle played a soft and rythmic tune. The moon, so round and mellow, lit the darkness of the night, And cleft the rippling water with a golden path of light. Each little wave that gamboled with a moonbeam from afar Seemed part of the glorious firmament, a sparkling jewelled star. A deer from out the shelt’ring wood stole to the water’s brink, Gazed mildly ’round with trustful eye, then bent its head to drink; No fear had it of the wraith-like craft so smoothly gliding along, For the stars and the moon cried “Courage!” “Have faith,” was the pine trees’song. —Alison Warner. May Day TTEAR the tramp, tramp, tramp of thousands x Along the dusty street. Hear the murmur of their voices As they fight against defeat. As yet they only wander, Waiting for a man to lead. When he comes, the world will quiver— Labor will be freed! —Don Lingwood.

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